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Edward
Dixon Westfall Citizen of the Republic of Texas By
Debra Westfall He had a very open view on church, he loved to go and listen to church services whenever the circuit preachers came around. The denomination did not matter though Edward preferred sermons base on following God’s ways for the love of God, he firmly did not believe you should practice religion because of fear of damnation. In his journeys there was a comment he made that was rather interesting. He stated, “I do not understand what it is about wash day that takes a perfectly even tempered women and makes her grumpy, plum to the point that a man doesn’t come home for supper and dinner is always late.” Edward walked to town everyday to get the newspapers, he loved knowing what was going on in the area and country, he mentions in a few entries his displeasure when the did not arrive on time and he went home empty handed. Before his death he wrote his will leaving his entire estate to the city of San Antonio, after the death of his wife. The proceeds were to go to building a public library, with the stipulation that there be a reading room for black people. If at the time of his wife’s death a library was already build, then the proceeds were to go for improvements. His wife was thirty-seven years younger than her husband, so for the forty-three years she lived after her husband she lived off of his pensions from the Mexican War and Indian War. At the time of her death his estate went for around $50,000. The City of San Antonio used the money toward a branch library and named it the Westfall Branch Library. A picture of Edward Westfall hangs on the wall in the library reminding us of his generosity. He died in 1897 at the age of 76 on his farm and was referred to by his wife as "a loving, caring husband that would be sorely missed.” He left no descendants, but his brother Abel’s family has thrived in Texas and many of them were present to at the ceremony.
Newspaper Clippings on Edward Dixon Westfall
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